ORIGINAL PAPER
The Creation of the Workplace Social Courage Scale (WSCS):An Investigation of Internal Consistency, PsychometricProperties, Validity, and Utility
Matt C. Howard1,2 • James L. Farr2 • Alicia A. Grandey2 • Melissa B. Gutworth2
� Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016
Abstract
Purpose The current article reviews extant knowledge on
courage and identifies a dimension of courage relevant to
modern organizations, social courage, which is an (a) in-
tentional, (b) deliberate, and (c) altruistic behavior that
(d) may damage the actor’s esteem in the eyes of others.
Through a multiple-study process, quantitative inferences
are derived about social courage, and the Workplace Social
Courage Scale (WSCS) is created.
Design Four studies using seven samples analyze the
WSCS’s psychometric properties, internal consistency,
method effects, discriminant validity, convergent validity,
concurrent validity, and utility. Many of these are investi-
gated or replicated in largely working adult samples.
Findings Each aspect of the WSCS approaches or meets
specified guidelines. Also, social courage is significantly
related to organizational citizenship behaviors, and the
construct may relate to many other important workplace
outcomes.
Implications The current study is among the first to
quantitatively demonstrate the existence of courage as a
construct, and the discovered relationships are the first
statistical inferences about social courage. Future research
and practice can now apply the WSCS to better understand
the impact of social courage within the workplace.
Originality Despite many attempts, no author has created a
satisfactory measure of courage, and the current article
presents the first successful measure through focusing on a
particular courage dimension—social courage. Future
research should take interest in the created measure, the
WSCS, as its application can derive future inferences about
courage and social courage.
Keywords Courage � Social courage � Measurement �Scale creation � Psychometrics
For centuries, philosophers and scholars have supported
the importance of courage for highly stressful and difficult
occupations, such as soldier and astronaut, but recent
authors have likewise suggested that the construct influ-
ences common workplace interactions. Today, courage is
believed to impact organizational citizenship behaviors
(OCBs; Hannah et al. 2011), ethical decision making
(Ayling 2006), whistleblowing (Bashir et al. 2011; Faunce
et al. 2004), leadership (Snyder et al. 1994; Stefano and
Wasylyshyn 2005), performance (Lindh et al. 2010; May
1994), and other important outcomes. Even popular
magazines support courage. In 2002, Time selected Sher-
ron Watkins (Enron), Coleen Rowley (FBI), and Cynthia
Cooper (WorldCom) as its persons of the year, because
they exemplified courage in the workplace (Time, 30
December 2002). While these examples draw attention to
the importance of courage, few propositions have been
& Matt C. Howard
James L. Farr
Alicia A. Grandey
Melissa B. Gutworth
1 Mitchell College of Business, The University of South
Alabama, 5811 USA Drive S., Rm. 346, Mobile, AL 36688,
USA
2 Industrial/Organizational Psychology, The Pennsylvania
State University, 140 Moore Building, University Park,
PA 16802-3106, USA
123
J Bus Psychol
DOI 10.1007/s10869-016-9463-8
empirically tested, and much is still unknown about the
construct.
The most imposing barrier in courage research is likely
the lack of valid measurement. Attempts have been made
to create general courage scales, but the measures often
possess concerning factor loadings, dimension labels,
psychometric properties, and validity (Norton and Weiss
2009; Woodard and Pury 2007). To avoid these concerns,
we do not focus on general courage in the current article.
Instead, we identify a specific courage dimension with
important workplace implications, social courage, and we
create a psychometrically sound and valid scale through
four studies using seven samples. In doing so, the scale’s
convergent, concurrent, and discriminant validity are
examined, and it is shown to relate to important employee
outcomes. Through this process, the existence of social
courage as a construct is firmly supported, initial inferences
about social courage are shown, a scale is created to allow
further research and practice involving social courage, and
the implications of each are further discussed.
Background
What is Courage?
Varying definitions of courage have been provided
throughout history, resulting in disagreements about whe-
ther courage is a behavior or trait. Many studies apply
operational definitions such as, ‘‘persistence despite fear,’’
which describe a behavior, but create scale items akin to, ‘‘I
am courageous’’ (Norton and Weiss 2009, p. 10), which
describe a trait. Pury and Starkey (2010) label this the
difference between courage as a process and an accolade.
They note that defining courage as a process encapsulates a
variety of behaviors, which can be attributed as courageous
or not courageous based on predetermined guidelines, and
people are considered courageous if they repeatedly per-
form these behaviors. Alternatively, when defining courage
as an accolade, the label is reserved for those who are
‘‘different from the rest’’ (Pury and Starkey 2010, p. 85).
People are considered courageous based on vague and
changing notions, and it is difficult to ascribe the construct
to anyone. In modern research, definitions that treat cour-
age as a process are more common and desired (Norton and
Weiss 2009; Rachman 1990; Rate et al. 2007; Rate 2010;
Woodard 2004; Woodard and Pury 2007). These defini-
tions are based on direct and observable behaviors, and
create cutoffs between courageous and uncourageous
individuals.
The most accepted process definition of courage was
created by Rate et al (2007), which has been empirically
and theoretically supported (Hannah et al. 2011; Howard
and Alipour 2014; Koerner 2014; Rate 2010; Sekerka et al.
2009). They define courage as ‘‘(a) A willful, intentional
act, (b) executed after mindful deliberation, (c) involving
objective substantial risk to the actor, (d) primarily moti-
vated to bring about a noble good or worthy end’’ (p. 95).
Although the term ‘‘noble’’ is ambiguous, most studies
consider it synonymous with prosocial, and a courageous
behavior must be primarily performed for the benefits of
others (Howard and Alipour 2014; Rate 2010). Thus, Rate
and colleagues’ definition includes four primary aspects:
(a) intention, (b) deliberation, (c) personal risk, and
(d) prosocial motivation.
Once a behavior satisfies these four aspects, the act can
be further recognized as a particular courage dimension.
Identifying the dimensions of courage may be helpful in
predicting important workplace outcomes, as specific
constructs are often better at predicting outcomes than
general constructs (Agarwal et al. 2000; Watson and Clark
1992). Thus, a dimension of courage with possible orga-
nizational implications is identified below.
Dimensions of Courage
Woodard and Pury (2007) provide three important infer-
ences about courage dimensions. First, courage dimensions
are most often labeled by the risks involved. For instance,
soldiers and firefighters both show physical courage
because they risk their physical well-being. Second, a
person may be courageous when facing certain risks but
retreat from others, suggesting that the dimensions are
distinct. Third, general courage is often considered an
aggregation of the various courage dimensions, and mul-
tiple second-order dimensions are subsumed in a first-order
general construct. A visual representation of this concep-
tualization is presented in Fig. 1.
These three inferences can also be seen in modern the-
oretical models of courage created in the context of the
workplace (Koerner 2014; Schilpzand et al. 2015). The
process model of courage created by Schilpzand et al.
(2015) proposes that courageous actions are responses to
challenging events that pose substantial personal risk, and
these risks greatly influence the likelihood of subsequent
(in)action. Identifying certain categories of risks, as sug-
gested by Schilpzand et al. (2015), may help identify when
and why certain people perform courageous action, which
suggests an underlying dimensionality of courage. Like-
wise, the identity process model of courage created by
Koerner (2014) suggests that people see themselves as
possessing several identities simultaneously (i.e., self-
identity, relational identity, and organizational identity).
These identities may conflict with each other when a
challenging event occurs, and the tension between, and
possible changes to, one’s identities is believed to be the
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123
personal risk involved with courageous action. Identifying
the specific identities in opposition, and therefore the rel-
evant risk, may help identify when and why certain people
perform courageous action, again suggesting an underlying
dimensionality to courage.
Integrating these theoretical models with prior research
can identify dimensions of courage with particular rele-
vance to the workplace. In the qualitative work of
Schilpzand et al. (2015), they discovered that the most
common cause of courageous action in the workplace was
a response to abusive supervision, and interviewees
repeatedly noted the threats to their interpersonal supervi-
sor–subordinate relations in descriptions of these actions.
The authors further suggest that the relative power of those
involved is a primary determinant of courageous action or
inaction, reflecting the inherent social nature of courage.
Employees are more likely to perform courageous actions
if they have a social power advantage over others. Thus, in
the work of Schilpzand et al. (2015), overcoming threats to
one’s relationships is a major theme of workplace courage,
and their model emphasizes that courage is a social
phenomenon.
Further, in Koerner’s (2014) analysis of workplace
courage narratives, she discovered and detailed five dif-
ferent identity conflicts, two of which were social in nature.
One was the conflict between self-identity and relational
identity and the other was the conflict between two dif-
ferent social identities. When the former conflict occurs,
individuals’ values are pitted against their role-based
interpersonal relationships, such as supervisor–subordinate.
For example, a subordinate may feel the need to follow
their supervisor’s commands, even if they are unethical,
but their personal values may conflict with such com-
mands, resulting in tension and anxiety. When the latter
conflict occurs, demands associated with one social iden-
tity, such as friend, threaten values associated with another
social identity, such as manager. For example, a manager
may struggle with disciplining a subordinate because of
their friendship, resulting in tension and anxiety. In the
work of Koerner (2014), actions involving risks and ten-
sions to relationships and/or social standing were a major
theme of workplace courage.
Lastly, several other authors have proposed dimension-
alities of courage with varying theoretical sophistication
(Geller and Veazie 2009; Rate 2010). Woodard and Pury
(2007) suggested that the dimensions of courage may be
defined by three risks: physical, emotional, and social. In
her earlier work, Schilpzand (2008) also proposed that
workplace courage can be defined by three risks: physical,
entrepreneurial, and social. May (1994) likewise stated that
courage may be differentiated by risks, suggesting the
existence of physical, moral, and social courage. Thus,
despite some variability, each typology includes physical
and social courage.
Physical courage has been occasionally studied in
specific organizations, such as military, firefighting, or
police contexts, where overcoming risk of physical harm is
required to perform one’s job (Lopez and Snyder 2009;
Schilpzand 2008). Less well studied is social courage,
actions that overcome risks to relationships and/or social
standing, which should be possible across a greater variety
of organizational contexts (May 1994; Schilpzand et al.
2015). We focus on social courage, as an important and
necessary form of courage that has been relatively ignored
in organizational scholarship.
Social Courage
Drawing on the accepted social risk definition (Weber et al.
2002), social courage is a courageous behavior in which the
risks involved could damage the actor’s esteem in the eyes
of others. Social courage can be displayed by two main
types of behaviors. The first type includes those that could
damage the actor’s relationships (Schilpzand et al. 2015;
Worline et al. 2002). For example, when confronting a
coworker’s problematic behaviors, the coworker may
become hostile and angry. In turn, this could damage the
relationship between the actor and coworker. Of the pos-
sible social courage behaviors, those that could damage
relationships are the most commonly discussed in research
(Koerner 2014; Schilpzand 2008; Worline et al. 2002). The
second type includes actions that could damage the actor’s
social image, also called face-loss costs (Gupta et al. 1996;
Madzar 2001). For example, if an employee asks for help
Physical Courage
Moral Courage
Social Courage
Other Courage Dimensions
General Courage
Fig. 1 Visual representation of courage conceptualization
J Bus Psychol
123
on their duties, he or she risks others believing the
employee lacks knowledge or is attempting ingratiation. In
this instance, the employee would lose esteem due to
perceptions of incompetence or inauthenticity.
Qualitative research supports that social courage is
linked to negative feedback giving, leading others effec-
tively, organizational citizenship behaviors, and many
other workplace outcomes (Bashir et al. 2011; Geller and
Veazie 2009; Worline et al. 2002). These social behaviors
can be deterred when there is fear of social consequences.
Those with social courage, however, may be more likely to
perform the required behaviors to achieve these outcomes.
In turn, these behaviors improve performance, unit pro-
ductivity, and organizational climate, drawing further
attention to the importance of social courage. For this
reason, a quantitative investigation into social courage
would further benefit research and practice, as efforts could
be made to overcome negative consequences and enable
beneficial behaviors. In order to pursue such an investiga-
tion, a psychometrically sound and valid measure of social
courage is necessary.
Measuring Courage and Social Courage
A few researchers have created scales to gauge general
courage and/or its dimensions, but these scales have been
problematic and seldom used after their initial publication
(Kilmann et al. 2010; Schmidt and Koselka 2000). Many
scales show concerns over content validity. For example,
some studies have used single-item measures, which are
unlikely to gauge the entire scope of courage or its
dimensions. Also, some scales are not relevant to individ-
ual-level behavior or work settings. These scales are cli-
mate measures or contain items such as ‘‘When you have a
panic attack, do you behave courageously?’’ Lastly, relia-
bilities of these scales are often below suggested levels,
with Cronbach alphas around .60, such that observed
relationships may be artificially decreased. To our knowl-
edge, only two scales gauge courage of the individual, are
applicable to workplace settings, and have been used in
multiple studies.
The most widely used courage scale is The Courage
Measure (TCM; Norton and Weiss 2009). This scale mea-
sures general courage, and consists of twelve ‘‘rationally-
derived items to assess self-perceived courageousness’’
(Norton and Weiss 2009). Example items are, ‘‘I will do
things even if they seem to be dangerous’’ and ‘‘I would
describe myself as ‘chicken’’’ (reverse coded). During its
creation, the sole validation measure of TCM was a partic-
ipant’s ability to approach a spider, which does not involve
all four aspects of courage. Further, a follow-up analysis
showed that TCM likely does not gauge courage (Howard
and Alipour 2014), possibly due to the authors’ operational
definition, ‘‘persistence or perseverance despite having
fear.’’ Items developed from this definition may instead
capture risk taking or trait persistence, as it does not include
the prosocial requirement of courage. Thus, TCM may not
actually gauge courage and certainly not social courage.
The other scale is the Woodard-Pury Courage Scale 23
(WP-23; Woodard and Pury 2007). Many of the scale’s
items load on multiple factors, and the creators express
uncertainty toward appropriate factor labels. The cross-
loadings may be due to a focus on general courage rather
than specific dimensions, and the items may inadvertently
represent a combination of several courage dimensions
(i.e., I would go where I wanted to go and do what I wanted
to do, even though I might be bullied as an ethnic minor-
ity). The noted item could gauge physical courage, as the
person may risk physical assault; however, it could also
gauge social courage, as the person may risk negative
social interactions. The cross-loadings and unclear factor
structure are problematic. Those applying the scale cannot
be certain of the courage dimensions that they are gauging,
and subsequent inferences could be misleading.
Overall, existing courage scales have problematic psy-
chometric properties and/or differing conceptualizations of
courage, and these measures do not effectively assess the
most relevant type of courage in an organizational context,
social courage. Although the various types of courage are
likely interrelated, and multiple dimensions may be rele-
vant to a single behavior (Geller and Veazie 2009; Rate
2010), a focus on one dimension that is most relevant to
our context of interest is likely to be most fruitful. We turn
our attention first for developing a measure of social
courage, then discuss evidence for its predictive validity
with social behaviors in organizations. We contribute to the
existing literature by creating and providing validation
evidence for the first, to our knowledge, social courage
scale in the context of the workplace.
Scale Development
Four studies are performed to create the social courage
scale. Study 1 creates the initial scale. Study 2 analyzes the
scale’s psychometric properties. Study 3 examines the
scale’s convergent validity (relation with other courage
measures), concurrent validity (relation with theoretically
related constructs), and discriminant validity (relation with
theoretically unrelated constructs). Study 4 investigates the
scale’s utility.
Study 1: Item-Sort Task
To develop the social courage scale, an over-representa-
tive item list was created and subsequently reduced,
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which helps ensure adequate content validity (Hinkin
1995, 1998). These items were formulated from previous
qualitative studies on workplace courage that includes
critical incidents (Koerner 2014; Schilpzand 2008; Wor-
line et al. 2002) as well as formal and informal interviews
with employees in various occupations including profes-
sor, nurse, factory worker, mechanic, and human resource
manager. In total, 49 items were created to measure social
courage in a workplace context (Appendix Table 6), and
these items were evaluated through an item-sort task.
Item-sort tasks are often used in scale development
research to identify items that may not gauge the con-
struct of interest (Anderson and Gerbing 1991; Howard
and Melloy 2015).
Participants
Sample 1
Sample 1 consisted of 20 subject matter experts (SMEs)
from two large mid-Atlantic universities. These SMEs
were all research assistants or graduate students in I/O
Psychology. The sample was primarily Caucasian and had
a median age of 24 years.
Procedure
SMEs were given the definitions of social courage—dam-
aging relationships, social courage—damaging social
image, general courage, sociability, shyness, extraversion,
public self-consciousness, and honesty. Then, SMEs were
told to indicate which construct they believed each item
gauged from the definitions provided, and an additional
choice was given that read ‘‘other form of courage.’’ Items
consistently assigned to their corresponding construct dis-
play high levels of substantive validity, indicative of the
overall measure’s construct validity (Anderson and Gerb-
ing 1991; Howard and Melloy 2015).
For the current study, the proportion of substantive
agreement (pSA) and the coefficient of substantive validity
(cSV) were used to assess the results of the item-sort task.
pSA refers to the proportion of respondents that indicated an
item measures its intended construct, and cSV is the extent
that respondents indicate an item measures its intended
construct more-so than any other construct (Anderson and
Gerbing 1991). For a sample size of 20, items with a
cSV [ .50 are statistically significant (Howard and Melloy
2015). Also, roughly equal numbers of items from each
type of behavior were retained to ensure that the final
measure did not solely measure only one. For example, if
20 items met the cutoffs in damaging relationships and 10
met the cutoffs in damaging social image, then 10 in each
dimension would be retained.
Results/Discussion
Appendix Table 6 includes each item and their corre-
sponding pSA and cSV values. Only items with pSA C .75
and cSV C .60 were retained, as these items were judged to
gauge social courage and not other dimensions or con-
structs. This process removed 32 items from the original
49, resulting in an item bank of 17 items. Nine items were
categorized under ‘‘Social Courage—Damaging Relation-
ships,’’ and eight were ‘‘Social Courage—Damaging Social
Image.’’ Henceforth, the resulting items are called the
Workplace Social Courage Scale (WSCS).
Study 2: Psychometric Properties
In Study 2, the WSCS’s reliability and factor structure were
examined. As previous authors have noted (e.g., Hinkin
1995, 1998), it is critical that any measure is properly
intercorrelated and has an identifiable factor structure.
Participants
To analyze the WSCS’s psychometric properties, five
samples were used. These samples are also used in Studies
3 and 4 to demonstrate the WSCS’s validity, but they are
only reported here. Also, these samples are not grouped
together because each received separate measures.
Sample 2
Sample 2 consisted of 116 student participants (Mage = -
20.4, SDage = 2.34; 46 % female; 80 % Caucasian)
recruited from a large mid-Atlantic University, and given
course credit for participation. Most were not currently
employed (64 % unemployed).
Sample 3
Sample 3 consisted of 257 student participants (Mage =-
19.43, SDage = 1.78; 74 % female; 78 % Caucasian)
recruited from a large mid-Atlantic university, and given
course credit for participation. Most were not currently
employed (65 % unemployed).
Sample 4
Sample 4 consisted of 148 student participants (Mage =-
20.4, SDage = 1.22; 56 % female; 77 % Caucasian)
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recruited from a large mid-Atlantic university, and given
course credit for participation. Most were not currently
employed (60 % unemployed).
Sample 5
Sample 5 consisted of 408 adult participants (Mage = 29.95,
SDage = 8.73; 35 % female; 66 % Caucasian) recruited
from Amazon’s mTurk in return for a small amount of
monetary compensation. This website is an online platform
which connects individuals willing to perform small tasks on
their computer, such as taking a survey, with those who need
these tasks performed. Previous studies have shown results
using mTurk to be valid (Paolacci and Chandler 2014;
Shapiro et al. 2013). Most were currently employed (77 %
employed), and almost all had been employed at some point
during their lives (99 %).
Measures
WSCS
When administering the WSCS, the instructions direct
participants to, ‘‘NOT answer these questions with your
current job or workgroup in mind. Instead, respond based
on how you would act in a workplace after working there
for five years.’’ The purpose of the WSCS is to gauge
participants’ social courage. If participants reported their
propensity to perform behaviors in their current work-
places, organizational factors may impact their responses.
For instance, a participant may work in a threatening
environment and most any social behavior would incur
risk, whereas a different participant may work in a relaxing
environment and social risks are mostly nonexistent. These
factors would prompt the two participants to report dif-
fering propensities to perform social courage behaviors, but
the two participants may possess equal amounts of social
courage. For this reason, the WSCS instructions ask par-
ticipants to disregard their current workplaces and think of
a workplace where they are relatively tenured.
Results/Discussion
To perform the EFA, a principal axis factoring method
with a direct oblimin rotation was chosen using Sample 2.
An analysis of the resulting Scree plot indicated that the
scale is unidimensional. The eigenvalues greatly decreased
after the first factor and then decreased at a consistent rate
afterward, suggesting only one underlying factor (eigen-
values = 5.372, 1.355, 1.244, 1.201 …). A parallel anal-
ysis also supported the unidimensional interpretation
(parallel analysis 95th percentile eigenvalues = 2.064,
1.848, 1.699, 1.586 …). Additionally, all but one factor
loading exceeded the conventional cutoff of .35 (Hinkin
1998), and this one item was removed. Therefore, despite
the creation of the WSCS including the possibility that the
items may load on two separate factors, the results indi-
cated that the scale is unidimensional.
These results were replicated with Samples 3 and 4,
combined, through a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA).
When performing the CFA, a listwise deletion method was
used for missing data. First, standardized item loadings
were analyzed. Most item loadings were above .55, indi-
cating that items loaded onto the latent factor well. One
item had a standardized item lowing below .35, and also
had a slightly concerning EFA loading (.42). For these
reasons, this item was removed. Next, modification indices
were analyzed. Items with the greatest summed modifica-
tion indices were removed in a stepwise manner until no
modification indices above 10 remained. This resulted in
the removal of four items. Lastly, model fit was analyzed.
The unidimensional model fit the data well. The CFI (.93)
almost met its benchmark of .95, and GFI (.95) did. The
SRMR (.05) was below its cutoff of .05, whereas the
RMSEA (.06) almost met it. The ratio of degrees of free-
dom to v2 also indicates good model fit (2.35). The worst
fit index, NFI, was .88. Although this did not meet the
cutoff of .95, the surrounding support for model fit over-
comes this single value. These results suggest that the
unidimensional model fits well.
After confirming the factor structure in a student sample,
it was necessary to confirm the factor structure in an adult,
largely working sample (Sample 5). A CFA was performed
on the 11 remaining WSCS items. Most item loadings were
above .55, but one was below .40. As this item loaded well
on the single factor in all previous analyses, it was retained.
The overall model fit was also appropriate. The CFI (.93)
and GFI (.94) approached the benchmark of .95. The NFI
(.90) was below its cutoff but still acceptable. The SRMR
(.05) and RMSEA (.07) similarly met or approached their
cutoff of .05. The ratio of degrees of freedom to v2 was
higher than expected (3.07), but not overly concerning.
Overall, unidimensional model fits the data well. Appendix
2 contains the final WSCS. The means, standard deviations,
standardized factor loadings, and corrected item-total cor-
relations are included in Table 1. From the EFA and CFAs,
each item of the WSCS appears to gauge social courage as
only one dimension emerged in all analyses.
Lastly, the WSCS has a satisfactory internal consis-
tency. Its Cronbach’s alphas were .82 (Sample 2), .82
(Sample 3), .78 (Sample 4), .85 (Sample 5), .84 (Sample 6),
and .85 (Sample 7). The scale means (standard deviations)
were 5.09 (.84; Sample 2), 4.92 (.75; Sample 3), 5.20 (.70;
Sample 4), 5.09 (.86; Sample 5), 5.06 (.85; Sample 6), and
4.98 (.86; Sample 7).
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123
Study 3: Validity
The goal of Study 3 is to examine the convergent, con-
current, and discriminant validity of the WSCS—a neces-
sary part of the scale development process. The WSCS
should be positively related to existing courage measures
as well as the components of courage, such as risk taking
and prosocial motivation (Peterson 2006; Rate et al. 2007;
Rate 2010; Lopez and Snyder 2009).
Further, social courage should be related to several
interpersonal tendencies (Cheek and Buss 1981; Crozier
2005). Certain personality traits may cause individuals to
thrive in social situations and be drawn to social interaction
(extroversion, sociability, and interpersonal trust), whereas
others may cause individuals to overly focus on the risks
involved with social interactions (neuroticism, shyness, and
public self-consciousness). The WSCS should be positively
related to the former constructs, but it should be negatively
related to the latter constructs.
Also, constructs involving approach and avoid tenden-
cies should be related to social courage (Ferris et al. 2011;
Judge et al. 2003; Rate 2010; VandeWalle 1997). Of such
constructs, the WSCS should be positively related to con-
scientiousness, core self-evaluations (CSE), and learning
goal orientation—all approach-oriented tendencies. The
scale should be negatively related to avoid and prove goal
orientations—both avoidance-oriented tendencies.
Lastly, the WSCS should not be related to impulsivity,
as there is little, if any, reason to believe that impulsive
individuals are more or less courageous in social situations.
Measures
Courage
The 11-item WSCS was administered to measure social
courage (Appendix 2). We also included The Courage
Measure (TCM; Norton and Weiss 2009), which has some
psychometric concerns but is better than alternatives
(Howard and Alipour 2014). Finally, we included the
Personal Courage Scale (PCS; Schilpzand 2008) which
gauges physical, social, and entrepreneurial courage;
however, the social courage dimension is confounded with
items about moral courage.
Risk Taking
Global Risk Taking was measured with Westaby and Lee’s
(2003) scale. We also included the Risk-Behavior Scale
(Weber et al. 2002) that distinguishes several types of risk,
including ethical, financial, health/safety, recreational, and
social.
Personality
To measure the Big Five traits, Saucier’s (1994) Mini-
markers was administered. The Sociability Scale was given
to gauge sociability (Cheek and Buss 1981), and The
Revised Cheek and Buss Shyness Scale was administered
(Crozier 2005). Public self-consciousness was measured
with the 12-item measure created by Goldberg et al. (2006).
Interpersonal trust was measured through Goldberg et al.’s
(2006) 10-item measure. Judge et al.’s (2003) 12-item CSE
scale was administered. Finally, the Barratt Impulsivity Scale
(Patton and Stanford 1995) was administered.
Motivational Tendencies
Prosocial motivation at work was measured with Grant’s
(2008) four-item measure. Goal orientations were mea-
sured with VandeWalle’s (1997) scale.
Results/Discussion
The results of Study 3 are included in Table 2. To deter-
mine the WSCS’s convergent, validity was determined
with measures of courage, moral/social courage,
Table 1 WSCS item means,
SD, standardized item loadings,
and corrected item-total
correlations (Sample 5)
Item number Mean SD Standardized item loadings Corrected item-total correlation
1. WSCS 1 4.78 1.37 .48 .43
2. WSCS 2 5.16 1.29 .60 .53
3. WSCS 3 5.30 1.36 .52 .48
4. WSCS 4 4.92 1.42 .57 .55
5. WSCS 5 5.26 1.37 .57 .52
6. WSCS 6 5.31 1.36 .66 .60
7. WSCS 7 5.21 1.28 .72 .65
8. WSCS 8 5.28 1.34 .72 .65
9. WSCS 9 5.29 1.34 .58 .53
10. WSCS 10 4.40 1.74 .37 .34
11. WSCS 11 5.22 1.26 .72 .67
J Bus Psychol
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Table 2 Correlations of the WSCS testing convergent, concurrent, and discriminant validity
2 WSCS TCM PC SC EC
WSCS .82
TCM .50** .89
PC .39** .51** .90
SC .50** .32** .41** .76
EC .44** .59** .36** .36** .56
3 WSCS TCM Extro Neuro Consc Open Agree Soc Shy SoCon Trust Risk CSE
WSCS .82
TCM .44** .86
Extro .35** .35** .87
Neuro -.16* -.30** -.23** .84
Consc .20** .14* .18** -.44** .84
Open .32** .38** .08 -.19** .22** .74
Agree .14* -.02 .24** -.40** .48** .17* .88
Soc .21** .18** .55** -.12 .17** .07 .36** .84
Shy -.29** -.39** -.77** .39** -.33** -.11 -.28** -.48** .87
SeCon -.21** -.52** -.36** .54** -.21** -.25** .00 -.12 .49** .83
Trust .19** .16* .34** -.35** .24** .06 .49** .44** -.34** -.26** .90
Risk .09 .48** .22** -.03 -.18** .18** -.18** .23** -.17** -.23** .01 .85
CSE .28** .33** .36** -.52** .46** .12 .29** .26** -.49** -.48** .52** .05 .87
4 WSCS SocR RecR GamR HeaR EthR IvstR ProSo Intri Learn Prov Perfor Impul
WSCS .78
SocR .33** .51
RecR .11 .18* .77
GamR .02 .13 .43** .80
HeaR .03 .27** .45** .40** .70
EthR -.08 .29** .31** .36** .54** .78
IvstR .11 .11 .29** .25** .26** .18* .83
ProSo .30** .28** -.07 -.05 -.09 -.06 .03 .92
Intri .20** .12 .00 -.06 -.09 -.03 .17* .33** .91
Learn .50** .23** .34** .12 .04 -.00 .24** .33** .20* .85
Prov .11 -.14 .09 .20* .02 .02 -.05 .07 -.10 .05 .71
Perfor -.35** -.18* -.28** .01 -.11 .09 -.11 -.00 .03 -.36** .27** .88
Impul -.13 .15 .18* .34** .44** .36** -.06 -.13 -.22** -.18* .18* .09 .87
Reliabilities on diagonal
Correlations in the first section labeled 2 are obtained from Sample 2. Correlations in the second section labeled 3 are obtained from Sample 3.
Correlations in the third section labeled 4 are obtained from Sample 4
WSCS Workplace Social Courage Scale, TCM The Courage Measure, PC Physical Courage (Personal Courage Scale), SC Social Courage
(Personal Courage Scale), EC Entrepreneurial Courage (Personal Courage Scale), Extro Extroversion (Big Five), Neuro Neuroticism (Big Five),
Consc Conscientious (Big Five), Open Openness (Big Five), Agree Agreeable (Big Five), Soc Sociability, Shy Shyness, SeCon Public Self-
Consciousness, Trust Interpersonal Trust, Risk Global Risk Taking, CSE Core Self-Evaluations, SocR Social Risk Taking, RecR Recreational
Risk Taking, GamR Gambling Risk Taking, HeaR Health Risk Taking, EthR Ethical Risk Taking, IvstR Investment Risk Taking, ProSo Prosocial
Motivation, Intri Intrinsic Motivation, Learn Learn Goal Orientation, Prov Prove Goal Orientation, Perfor Perform Goal Orientation, Impul
Impulsivity
* p\ .01, ** p\ .05
J Bus Psychol
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entrepreneurial courage, and physical courage. The WSCS
correlated moderately to strongly with all four constructs,
ranging from .39 to .50 (all p\ .01), showing that the
WSCS has adequate convergent validity.
Several variables were used to analyze the WSCS’s
concurrent validity. The first were those mandated by the
definition of courage, risk, and prosocial motivation. The
WSCS had a low correlation of .09 with risk taking
(p[ .05) and .30 with prosocial motivation (p\ .01).
While the correlation with prosocial motivation supports
the WSCS, the correlation with risk taking is surprising. To
further test this, a dimensional risk taking measure was
administered. The WSCS moderately correlates with social
risk taking (r = .33; p\ .01), and has small correlations
with all other types of risk taking. Thus, the WSCS’s
moderate correlation with social risk taking supports the
scale’s concurrent validity, while its low correlations with
alternative types of risk taking support the scale’s divergent
validity.
Next, the WSCS was expected to be related to inter-
personal tendencies. The WSCS had significant correla-
tions with neuroticism (r = -.16; p\ .01), extroversion
(r = .35, p\ .01), sociability (r = .21; p\ .01), shyness
(r = -.29; p\ .01), interpersonal trust (r = .19; p\ .01),
and public self-consciousness (r = -.21; p\ .01). Each of
these relationships supports the WSCS’s concurrent
validity.
The WSCS was also predicted to be related to constructs
involving approach and avoid tendencies. The scale was
significantly correlated with conscientiousness (r = .20;
p\ .01), CSEs (r = .28; p\ .01), learning goal orienta-
tion (r = .50, p\ .01), and avoid goal orientation
(r = -.35, p\ .01). Prove goal orientation had a non-
significant correlation of .11 (p[ .05). Overall, a majority
of these relationships support the validity of the WSCS.
Lastly, the WSCS was not significantly correlated with
impulsivity (r = -.13; p[ .05), supporting its discrimi-
nant validity.
The repeated support for the observed relationships
demonstrates the satisfactory validity of the WSCS for
measuring workplace social courage. Nevertheless, addi-
tional analyses investigating the scale’s relationship to
valued organizational outcomes can bolster these results.
Study 4: WSCS Utility
In addition to demonstrating the psychometric properties
and validity of a measure, it is important to demonstrate
that social courage and the WSCS are significantly related
to important workplace outcomes as indicators of concur-
rent validity and utility. For the current study, five impor-
tant workplace outcomes were chosen. First, employee
voice describes the activity of employees actively
impacting organizational decision making, and it is posi-
tively related to performance (Spencer 1986; Van Dyne
and LePine, 1998). When employees voice their opinion,
they face ‘‘going against the grain’’ and disrupting orga-
nizational norms to improve the company. Detert and
Burris (2007) even demonstrated that employees are less
likely to demonstrate employee voice when they perceive
more risk. Due to the inherent prosocial nature and social
risk involved in employee voice behaviors, it is believed to
relate to social courage.
Hypothesis 1 Social courage is positively related to
employee voice.
Second, OCBs are intentional behaviors that benefit an
organization, and are outside formal job requirements (Lam
et al. 2011; Madzar 2001; Williams and Anderson 1991).
These behaviors include voluntarily working overtime and
speaking positively about one’s organization outside the
workplace. OCBs are often performed for prosocial rea-
sons, but may incur social risks such as damaged rela-
tionships with coworkers. For instance, several authors
have noted that top performers are often targets of work-
place aggression (Geller and Veazie, 2009; Lam et al.
2011). As Jensen et al. (2014) note, ‘‘coworkers are moti-
vated to punish ‘rate-busting’ and thereby maintain the
workgroup’s current performance expectations, solidarity,
and their individual positive self-regard (p. 298).’’ OCBs
can contribute toward an employee being a top performer,
causing the employee to disgruntle coworkers (Gupta et al.
1996; Madzar 2001). Social courage is expected to posi-
tively relate to OCBs, as employees high in social courage
may be more likely to overcome social risks to perform
prosocial behaviors for the organization.
Hypothesis 2 Social courage is positively related to
OCBs.
Third, prosocial rule breaking (PSRB) involves violating
official organizational rules with the intention of improving
the company (Dahling et al. 2012). For example, an
employee may give a coupon to an upset customer to
ensure their continued patronage, although distributing
coupons may be against organizational policies. PSRB can
lead to positive organizational outcomes (Dahling et al.
2012; Morrison 2006; Vardaman et al. 2014), but
employees may be reluctant to perform these behaviors.
Going against organizational policies incurs interpersonal
risks, such as harming relationships with supervisors, and
certain employees may be unwilling to perform these
behaviors for that reason. We believe that those high in
social courage, which relates to positive behaviors despite
social risk, are more likely to perform PSRB behaviors.
J Bus Psychol
123
Hypothesis 3 Social courage is positively related to
PSRB.
Fourth, counterproductive work behaviors (CWBs) are
actions that damage organizations, and include theft, bul-
lying, and cyberloafing (Bennett and Robinson 2000;
Mount et al. 2006). Employees who perform CWBs endure
risk for personal gain and disregard the well-being of their
coworkers or organization. Self-centered actions are in
direct opposition to social courage. CWBs are expected to
be negatively related to social courage.
Hypothesis 4 Social courage is negatively related to
CWBs.
Fifth, authors continuously relate social courage to
better workplace performance, as employees with social
courage are willing to perform difficult behaviors that
benefit the organization. It is expected that social courage
is, indeed, positively related to performance.
Hypothesis 5 Social courage is positively related to
performance.
Lastly, the WSCS should be shown to predict these
outcomes beyond other aspects of personality. We test the
predictive ability of the WSCS beyond conscientiousness
and moral courage, which has been suggested to be a
courageous behavior that includes the use of inner princi-
ples and/or notable risks to others in addition to self
(Sekerka et al. 2009; Simola 2015).
Participants
Sample 6
Sample 6 consisted of 101 adult participants (Mage = 33.2,
SDage = 11.43; 47 % female; 56 % Caucasian) recruited
from mTurk in return for a small amount of monetary
compensation. Most were currently employed (82 %), and
all had been employed (100 %).
Sample 7
Sample 7 consisted of 248 currently working student par-
ticipants recruited from a large mid-Atlantic university
(Mage = 19.42; SDage = 2.05; 84 % female; 67 % Cau-
casian) and 114 supervisors of these working students
(Mage = 36.71; SDage = 12.48; 66 % female; 87 % Cau-
casian). The students participated for course credit. As part
of their participation, they sent a survey to their supervi-
sors, and ID codes were used to match responses. Methods
from prior articles were adapted to ensure that students did
not complete the supervisors’ surveys (Kuyumcu and
Dahling 2014). IP addresses were used to confirm that the
same computer was not used for both surveys. If a student–
supervisor pair had the same IP address, the supervisor
responses were removed. Also, supervisor responses were
removed if they started their survey within 30 min of the
student starting their survey, as supervisors would be
unlikely to receive study information that quickly. The
reported statistics reflect the sample after removing these
responses.
Measures
Each measure was administered to both students and
supervisors in Sample 7.
Workplace Social Courage
The 11-item WSCS was administered (Appendix 2).
Employee Voluntary Behavior
Employee voice was measured using Van Dyne and
LePine’s (1998) six-item measure. OCBs were measured
using Williams and Anderson’s (1991) 13-item measure.
PSRB was measured with Dahling and colleagues’ (2012)
13-item measure. CWBs were measured with Bennett and
Robinson’s (2000) 19-item scale.
Performance
Performance was measured using a five–item measure
created by Jensen et al. (2014). This measure was only
administered to Sample 7.
Control Variables
Conscientiousness was measured through Goldberg et al.’s
(2006) 10-item scale. Moral courage was measured using
Sekerka et al.’s (2009) moral courage scale. These mea-
sures were only administered to Sample 7.
Results/Discussion
The correlations using Samples 6 and 7 are included in
Tables 3 and 4. Regression results are included in Table 5.
The WSCS demonstrated a strong correlation with
employee voice in both samples when the variables were
self-reported (Sample 6, r = .60, p\ .01; Sample 7,
r = .49, p\ .01); however, the effect was very weak in the
self-supervisor report correlation, which uses the student
responses for the WSCS and supervisor responses for voice
(Sample 7, r = .07, p[ .05). The regression of self-re-
ported WSCS predicting supervisor-reported employee
J Bus Psychol
123
voice while controlling for self-reported conscientiousness
and moral courage was not significant (Sample 7,
B = .091, SE = .127, b = .075, t = .714, p[ .05). A
consistent moderate correlation of the WSCS with OCBs
was observed in both samples and across measurement
methods (Sample 6, r = .31, p\ .01; Sample 7 Self–Self,
r = .34, p\ .01; Sample 7 Self-Supervisor, r = .24,
p\ .05). The regression of WSCS predicting supervisor-
reported OCBs while controlling for conscientiousness and
moral courage was significant (Sample 7, B = .222,
SE = .103, b = .226, t = 2.157, p\ .05). These results
partially support Hypothesis 1 (voice) and fully support
Hypothesis 2 (OCBs), demonstrating that social courage
relates to positive organizational outcomes.
The correlation between the WSCS and PSRB varied
across the samples and methods, but it was always negative
(Sample 6, r = -.03, p[ .05; Sample 7 Self–Self,
r = -.14, p\ .01; Sample 7 Self-Supervisor, r = -.33,
p\ .01). The regression of WSCS predicting supervisor-
reported PSRB while controlling for conscientiousness and
moral courage was significant (Sample 7, B = -.500,
SE = .170, b = -.298, t = -2.936, p\ .01). The corre-
lation between the WSCS and CWBs also varied across the
samples and measurement methods (Sample 6, r = .03,
p[ .05; Sample 7 Self–Self, r = -.27, p\ .01; Sample 7
Self-Supervisor, r = -.19, p\ .05). The regression of
WSCS predicting supervisor-reported CWBs while con-
trolling for conscientiousness and moral courage was not
significant (Sample 7, B = -.130, SE = .084, b = -.164,
t = -1.547, p[ .05). Together, Hypothesis 3 (PSRB) was
not supported, but the WSCS demonstrated a significant
and negative relationship with PSRB. Hypothesis 4
(CWBs) was partially supported.
Lastly, the correlation between the WSCS and perfor-
mance was significant when self-reported (Sample 7,
r = .30, p\ .01), but it was not in the self-supervisor
report (Sample 7, r = .17, p\ .10). The regression of
WSCS predicting supervisor-reported performance while
controlling for conscientiousness and moral courage was
not significant (Sample 7, B = .469, SE = .287, b = .171,
t = 1.634, p[ .05). Hypothesis 5 (performance) was not
supported
These results demonstrate that the WSCS may be useful
in predicting certain workplace outcomes, particularly
OCBs and PSRB, even when controlling for conscien-
tiousness and moral courage. Also, the partially supported
hypotheses suggest that the relationship of the WSCS with
voice and CWBs may merit future research. Together,
Study 4 bolsters the previous results on the scale’s psy-
chometric properties and validity.
Overall Discussion
Although researchers have reached a general consensus
about the definition of courage, previous research has seen
particular struggles in creating an adequate measure of this
construct (Norton and Weiss 2009; Woodard and Pury
Table 3 Self-report correlations of the WSCS and important workplace outcomes
6 WSCS Voice OCBs PSRB CWBs
WSCS .84
Voice .60** .89
OCBs .31** .40** .66
PSRB -.03 -.01 -.04 .96
CWBs .03 .09 .12 .57** .97
7 WSCS Consc Moral C Voice OCBs PSRB CWBs Perf
WSCS .85
Consc .33** .84
Moral C .47** .52** .95
Voice .49** .26** .42** .87
OCBs .34** .38** .50** .44** .76
PSRB -.14* -.29** -.23** -.05 -.07 .95
CWBs -.27** -.42** -.38** -.16* -.22** .44** .93
Perf .30** .43** .49** .37** .42** -.13* -.32** .82
Reliabilities on diagonal
Correlations in the first section labeled 6 are obtained from Sample 6. Correlations in the second section labeled 7 are obtained from Sample 7
Voice Employee voice, OCBs organizational citizenship behaviors, PSRB prosocial rule breaking, CWBs counterproductive work behaviors,
Consc conscientiousness, Moral C moral courage
* p\ .01, ** p\ .05
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Table 4 Self-supervisor
correlations of the WSCS,
conscientiousness, moral
courage, and important
workplace outcomes in
Sample 7
WSCS Consc Moral C Voice OCBs PSRB CWBs Perf
WSCS .85
Consc .33** .84
Moral C .47** .52** .95
Voice .07 2.15 .09 .86
OCBs .24* .06 .14 .33** .77
PSRB 2.33** 2.19* 2.18 -.06 -.04 .96
CWBs 2.19* 2.13 2.11 .05 .14 .40** .98
Perf .17 2.08 .12 .12 .35** .01 -.04 .89
Reliabilities on diagonal
Correlations in bold are self-supervisor correlations
* p\ .01, ** p\ .05
Table 5 Regression results of
the WSCS predicting important
workplace outcomes while
controlling for
conscientiousness and moral
courage (Sample 7)
B SE b t B SE b t
Step 1 Voice Step 2 Voice
Constant 5.908** .620 9.529 5.659** .712 7.945
Consc -.254* .112 -.234 -2.267 -.268* .114 -.247 -.2351
Moral C .185 .097 .196 1.898 .159 .104 .168 1.520
WSCS .091 .127 .075 .714
R2 .05 .06
Step 1 OCBs Step 2 OCBs
Constant 4.984** .512 9.741 4.374** .578 7.574
Consc -.005 .082 -.005 -.052 -.038 .092 -.043 -.414
Moral C .107 .080 .139 1.328 .042 .085 .055 .500
WSCS .222* .103 .226 2.157
R2 .02 .06
Step 1 PSRB Step 2 PSRB
Constant 4.727** .860 6.100** .955 6.390
Consc -.199 .155 -.132 -1.280 -.124 .152 -.082 -.811
Moral C -.164 .135 -.125 -1.215 -.019 .140 -.015 -.137
WSCS -.500** .170 -.298 -2.936
R2 .05 .12
Step 1 CWBs Step 2 CWBs
Constant 1.797** .412 4.360 2.153** .470 4.583
Consc -.073 .074 -.102 -.979 -.053 .075 -.075 -.711
Moral C -.038 .065 -.062 -.594 -.001 .069 -.001 -.012
WSCS -.130 .084 -.165 -1.547
R2 .02 .04
Step 1 Performance Step 2 Performance
Constant 4.299** 1.412 3.045 3.012 1.607 1.874
Consc -.400 .255 -.163 -1.569 -.470 .257 -.192 -1.833
Moral C .416 .222 .195 1.875 .280 .236 .131 1.188
WSCS .469 .287 .171 1.634
R2 .04 .06
* p\ .01, ** p\ .05
J Bus Psychol
123
2007). Due to these measurement issues, courage has seen
limited study, especially in relation to workplace contexts.
Therefore, we created a psychometrically sound and valid
measure of a particular dimension of courage, social
courage, that theoretically has numerous implications for
the workplace.
The current article included four separate studies across
seven samples. In total, we collected data from 1412 par-
ticipants. Study 1 involved the creation and reduction of an
over-representative items list to gauge social courage.
Study 2 showed that the resulting scale had a unidimen-
sional factor structure and satisfactory internal consistency.
Study 3 revealed that the WSCS has strong convergent
validity with other courage measures, proper concurrent
validity with theoretically related constructs, and divergent
validity with unrelated constructs. Study 4 demonstrated
the utility of the WSCS, as it had consistently significant
relationships with OCBs and PSRB as well as occasionally
significant relationships with voice and CWBs. The results
of these phases show that the WSCS is a satisfactory
measure of workplace social courage.
The current study provides important theoretical impli-
cations for courage. First, the current study is among the
few to show that courage exists as a construct. Prior authors
have repeatedly suggested the importance of courage
(Hannah et al. 2011; Lindh et al. 2010; Stefano and
Wasylyshyn 2005), but investigations have been largely
theoretical. Further, empirical studies of courage have
primarily investigated participants’ labeling of courage
(Lopez et al. 2003; Rate et al. 2007; Rate 2010; Woodard
2004). While these studies provide information about
conceptualizations of courage, they do not actually show
that courage exists as a construct. Also, extant studies have
created courage measures with psychometric and validity
concerns (Norton and Weiss 2009; Woodard and Pury
2007), and these studies are therefore unable to explicitly
show that courage exists as a construct. In the current
article, we demonstrated that the WSCS likely measures
social courage, as determined through its numerous rela-
tionship with related measures, and courage is more than a
label attributed to a certain type of behavior—it is a con-
struct. Now, researchers can more reliability discuss the
benefits of courage, as it is measureable.
Second, the definition and dimensionality of courage are
generally agreed upon. Most authors adhere to Rate’s
(2010) definition, and courage is often categorized by the
risks (Pury et al. 2007; Woodard 2004; Woodard and Pury
2007). The WSCS is based upon Rate’s (2010) definition
and is defined by social risks, and the scale demonstrated
satisfactory psychometric properties and validity. This is
the first courage measure that exhibits these qualities, and
shows that the popular conceptualization of courage is
appropriate for measurement purposes.
Third, the current study is important for quantitatively
demonstrating that courage is separate from risk and
prosocial motivation. While previous authors have sug-
gested that these dynamics are involved in courage (Rate
et al. 2007; Rate 2010), only theoretical justifications have
been proposed for the distinctness of an overall courage
construct. Now, empirical evidence supports this notion.
Further, similar inferences were derived about social
courage’s relationship with several interpersonal tenden-
cies and approach/avoid temperaments.
Fourth, prior research has discussed the importance of
courage for workplace interactions, but the current study is
the first to quantitatively support the relationships of social
couragewith certainworkplace outcomes. For example, those
higher in social courage were more likely to engage in OCBs,
even when controlling for conscientiousness and moral
courage. Practitioners should capitalize upon this finding and
make efforts to elicit courage within their organizations.
Alternatively, several relationships of the WSCS were
contrary to expectations. In correlations between self-re-
port measures, a strong and positive relationship was
observed between social courage and voice. When voice
was gauged through supervisor-reports, however, the
relationship between the two constructs was nonsignificant.
Likewise, the relationship of the WSCS to CWBs was
significant in self-report correlations, but the relationship
became nonsignificant when using supervisor-reports of
CWBs. Also, the WSCS demonstrated a consistent nega-
tive relationship with PSRB, although it was predicted to
be positively related. These results indicate that social
courage may be related to other important workplace out-
comes, aside from OCBs, but more research is needed to
determine their true nature.
A possible explanation for these unexpected findings is
that supervisors tend to react negatively to antinorm
behavior, such as PSRB and voice, although these behav-
iors may aid the organization (Dahling et al. 2012).
Observers may perceive actors’ intentions inaccurately,
and may therefore be unable to appropriately distinguish
between others’ PSRB, voice, and CWBs (Dahling et al.
2012). Further, meta-analytic results find only moderate
correlations between self- and supervisor-reports (Harris
and Schaubroeck 1988). As Berry et al. note (2012),
supervisor-reports of CWBs ‘‘account for little incremental
variance’’ beyond self-reports, as supervisor ratings ‘‘cap-
ture a narrower subset of CWBs’’ (p. 613). This discrep-
ancy between rating sources may also explain why we
obtained some expected results among self-reports but not
among supervisor-reports. These possibilities, however,
should be explored in the future studies.
Fifth and lastly, our results may generalize across sev-
eral areas of research. Positive Psychology scholars have
repeatedly noted the importance of courage in day-to-day
J Bus Psychol
123
interactions (Howard and Alipour 2014; Lopez and Snyder
2009), and they can now use the WSCS to analyze courage
in working adults. Human Development researchers have
shown interest in courage for healthy psychological growth
(Norton and Weiss 2009; Rate 2010), and these authors can
apply the WSCS to study healthy adult development. Other
authors have noted that the study of courage extends to
anthropology, sociology, and philosophy (Harbour and
Kisfalvi 2014). Our findings likely generalize to these
fields. Despite these strengths, limitations should be noted.
Limitations
Several samples in the current article were student samples.
To alleviate this concern, the WSCS’s psychometric
properties were replicated in a largely employed adult
sample (Sample 5). Also, the relationship of the WSCS
with work-related variables was gauged in an adult sample
(Sample 6) and through supervisor-reports (Sample 7). In
the student samples (Samples 2, 3, and 4), the investigated
relationships were limited to perceptions and personality
characteristics that are not largely influenced by employ-
ment status. Further, supplemental analyses (available
upon request) demonstrated that the student sample results
largely did not differ when analyses were restricted to only
currently employed students. It is possible that most stu-
dents held previous employment, allowing them to answer
with an appropriate frame-of-reference. Thus, the use of
student samples within the current article is not believed to
be overly concerning.
Some researchers may be initially discouraged by the
wording of the WSCS, as each item is fairly complex. Each
item, however, was created with a particular structure in
mind. Given that courage involves risk and prosocial
motives, each item consists of two parts that emphasize one
or the other. For example, most individuals would surely
‘‘tell [their] coworkers when [they’ve] made a mistake,’’
but they may not if they believe ‘‘it makes [them] look
incompetent’’ (Item 9). Without this item format, the risks
or prosocial aspects of the behaviors may be lost.
To ensure this notion, a supplemental sample was col-
lected which included a version of the WSCS with only the
behaviors noted (i.e., I would tell my coworkers when I
have made a mistake). This version of the WSCS possessed
an unclear factor structure and poor concurrent validity,
causing concerns about its ability to measure courage
(analyses available upon request). Thus, the WSCS would
suffer without this particular item format.
Lastly, unreported analyses investigated the relationship
of the WSCS with three indicators of method effects—
social desirability, state affect, and trait affect. The WSCS
did not demonstrate concerning correlations with any of
these variables.
Future Directions
The creation of this measure opens several avenues for
future research. Authors can now reliably measure social
courage, and subsequent studies can investigate the
nomological net and predictive validity of the construct.
These investigations would benefit several fields of
research (Harbour and Kisfalvi 2014; Lopez and Snyder
2009). Also, practitioners can now measure social courage
to determine the importance of the construct in their
organizations. In this regard, it is important for future
research to demonstrate the influence of social courage on
performance outcomes, especially in certain occupations
such as salesperson or manager.
Further, practitioners should discover methods to elicit
courage within their employees, which has shown to be an
area of interest for many courage researchers (Ayling 2006;
Faunce et al. 2004). These researchers have already pro-
posed theoretical mechanisms to enhance workplace
courage, and any subsequent attempt can incorporate these
suggestions using the WSCS to test whether courage is
actually developed with these methods.
Furthermore, Koerner (2014) recently investigated the
impact of courageous behaviors on identity formation and
demonstrated that courage could be used to shape an
individual’s identity. When individuals perform coura-
geous acts, their perceptions about themselves become
solidified and new identities may be adopted. This notion
should be studied further. Now that a satisfactory measure
exists for a particular dimension of courage, and Koerner’s
(2014) qualitative research can be complemented with a
quantitative analysis.
Finally, authors have created a theoretical framework
around courage, but further research is needed to empiri-
cally demonstrate the dimensionality of courage. A multi-
tude of dimensions have been suggested, but the existence
of these dimensions, aside from social courage, has yet to
be shown. Through such efforts, an understanding of the
courageous worker can be achieved.
Conclusion
Previous studies have attempted to create satisfactory
measures of courage, but resultant scales often suffer from
poor psychometric properties or questionable validity. The
current article synthesized prior research and created a
satisfying measure of workplace social courage, the WSCS.
The results provide evidence that the WSCS is a psycho-
metrically sound and valid measure of workplace social
courage, as evident in its internal consistency, factor
structure, convergent validity, concurrent validity, dis-
criminant validity, and utility. These results also indicate
J Bus Psychol
123
that social courage is a measurable construct with impor-
tant organizational outcomes, and future studies should
further investigate the importance of courage and its
dimensions.
Appendix 1
See Table 6.
Table 6 Item-sort task results of the original 49 WSCS items
Question Intended
construct
pSA cSV
1. If I thought a question was dumb, I would still ask it if I didn’t understand something at work DSI .80 .70a,b,*
2. If I thought I may fail at a task at work, I would still volunteer to do it DSI .75 .55*
3. Despite making my coworker angry, I would tell him/her what they need to hear DR .95 .90a,b,*
4. Although it would make me look bad, I would admit to my mistakes at work DSI 1.0 1.0a,b,*
5. Although my coworker may disagree, I would stand up to him/her when they are being unfair DR .85 .75a,*
6. If I was not confident in my abilities at work, I still wouldn’t make excuses for my shortcomings DSI .30 -.10
7. I would not tolerate when a coworker is rude to someone, even if I make him/her upset DR .95 .90a,b,*
8. Although it may show how little I know about the topic, I would still volunteer for workshops and other learning
opportunities at work
DSI .80 .7a,b,*
9. Even if my coworkers could think less of me, I’d lead a project with a chance of failure DSI .85 .75a,b,*
10. If I failed at a task, I would still show to my coworkers that I tried my best DSI .30 0
11. Despite looking bad in the end, I would take control of a risky project DSI .80 .7a,*
12. Although it may damage our friendship, I would tell my superior when a coworker is doing something
incorrectly
DR 1.0 1.0a,b,*
13. If a coworker asked me a question about my job that I didn’t know, I would tell him/her that I am unsure DSI .45 -.10
14. Although my coworker may become offended, I would suggest to him/her better ways to do things DR 1.0 1.0a,b,*
15. Although it draws attention to my faults, I would own up to my mistakes when I mess up at work DSI .75 .55*
16. Even if a coworker didn’t ask for it, I would give him/her negative feedback DR .65 .35
17. Although my ideas may sound dumb, I share them with my coworkers DSI .75 .55*
18. Although my supervisor may get offended, I would question their orders if I disagreed with them DR .80 .70a,*
19. Even if it would make a bad impression on my coworkers, I would do what I should at work DSI .70 .50*
20. I would give coworkers my opinion, even if is an unpopular one DR .45 .15
21. Although it makes me seem like a ‘‘goodie–goodie,’’ I would publically acknowledge someone for doing a good
job
DSI .85 .80a,b,*
22. Despite making my coworker angry, I would tell him/her my thoughts about him/her DR .65 .35
23. Although it makes me look incompetent, I would tell my coworkers when I’ve made a mistake DSI .80 .65a,b,*
24. I would tell a coworker my beliefs about our workplace, although (s)he disagrees with my thoughts DR .30 -.25
25. Despite appearing dumb in front of an audience, I would volunteer to give a presentation at work DSI .75 .65a,b,*
26. Despite upsetting my coworker, I would let him/her know when they’ve made me mad. DR .75 .60a,*
27. Although my coworkers may notice my mistakes and judge me for them, I would let them look over my work DSI .90 .85a,b,*
28. I would do what I think is best for the organization, although my coworkers may make fun of me for it DSI .70 .55*
29. Although my actions would be seen as impolite, I would criticize a coworker when (s)he has done a poor job DR .70 .50*
30. Although it makes my coworkers angry, I would do what is expected at work DSI .45 .05
31. Although it could make matters worse, I would try to ‘‘make up’’ with a coworker that does not like me DR .50 .05
32. Despite my subordinate disliking me, I would tell him/her when they’re doing something against company
policy
DR .90 .85a,b,*
33. Despite my coworkers thinking I’m an overachiever, I would perform to the best of my abilities at work DSI .65 .50*
34. Even if my supervisor wouldn’t like me as much, I would tell him/her when I think they are being unreasonable DR .85 .80*
35. Despite my coworkers thinking I’m just trying to look good, I would do extra things at work DSI .70 .55*
36. I would be stern to a coworker to get a point across, even if they’d think differently of me DR .70 .55*
37. Even if it may damage our relationship, I would confront a subordinate who had been disrupting their
workgroup
DR 1.0 1.0a,b,*
38. I would let my coworkers know when I am concerned about something, even if they’d think I am too negative DSI .75 .65a,b,*
39. Although my coworkers would think I am a ‘‘suck-up,’’ I would do more than what my boss expects me to do DSI .70 .60*
J Bus Psychol
123
Appendix 2: Workplace Social Courage Scale(WSCS)
There are many risks that could be involved in workplace
interactions. These risks could range from minor to severe
risks, depending on the behavior. For the following, please
rate your agreement that you would perform the following
behaviors despite the risks involved. Use the scale below:
1 = Strongly Disagree
2 = Disagree
3 = Slightly Disagree
4 = Neutral
5 = Slightly Agree
6 = Agree
7 = Strongly Agree
You should NOT answer these questions with your
current job or workgroup in mind. Instead, respond based
on how you would act in a workplace after working there
for five years.
1. Although it may damage our friendship, I would
tell my superior when a coworker is doing some-
thing incorrectly.
2. Although my coworker may become offended, I
would suggest to him/her better ways to do things.
3. If I thought a question was dumb, I would still ask
it if I didn’t understand something at work.
4. Even if my coworkers could think less of me, I’d
lead a project with a chance of failure.
5. I would not tolerate when a coworker is rude to
someone, even if I make him/her upset.
6. Despite my subordinate disliking me, I would tell
him/her when they’re doing something against
company policy.
7. I would let my coworkers know when I am
concerned about something, even if they’d think I
am too negative.
8. Even if it may damage our relationship, I would
confront a subordinate who had been disrupting
their workgroup.
9. Although it makes me look incompetent, I would
tell my coworkers when I’ve made a mistake.
10. Despite appearing dumb in front of an audience, I
would volunteer to give a presentation at work.
11. Although it may completely ruin our friendship, I
would give a coworker an honest performance
appraisal.
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